• Valmond@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Proud Linux Mint debutant here!

      It’s been a year or so, and it’s so peaceful!

      I have a windoze junkbox for photoshop, 3ds and some light gaming, and it’s so painful to operate, everything is just so slow when it comes to the OS. Launch a soft, right click, open the explorer…

      • Zink@programming.dev
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        4 days ago

        Same experience here. I do embedded software development and usually have an entire monitor dedicated to command line stuff, and over the past year I’ve had zero urge to “upgrade” to a more hardcore distro.

        I installed Linux Mint Cinnamon directly after several months of using different distros in a VM on windows. Feels good man.

    • icogniito@lemmy.zip
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      5 days ago

      Arch (well right now more precisely cachyos)

      I’ve been using Linux on my homeserver (debian) and on previous laptops (arch) for almost a decade, but I only swapped my main desktop over this spring when nVidia sorted out waylaid explicit sync

    • newbeni@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Ubuntu, I wanted to go Debian but the installation wanted an ethternert connection to get that accomplished and I didn’t know that/think that far ahead

        • newbeni@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          I think so? I don’t remember now. I tried a few different ways and it came down to needing the ethernet connection so I bailed. Granted, I probably should have spent more than an hour on problem solving but I had a family hollering for me to go do stuff with them.

    • Rolivers@discuss.tchncs.de
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      5 days ago

      That doesn’t really matter too much and is mostly personal preference.

      The biggest difference is which package manager and how up to date each program in there is. Arch and OpenSuse Tumbleweed will have quite up to date packages as they’re rolling release models while Mint and Ubuntu tend to be a bit slower and more stable.

      I suggest going through the installation process of Arch linux at least once because it does teach you the basics of Linux but for usability you’d be better off with a distro that has a GUI installer.